#CCRSolar
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lily0819 · 2 months ago
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A big step forward for clean energy in the PA. ACPMember CCRSolar has completed construction of its 24 MW Erie Solar project in Erie, PA. The solar site will generate an estimated $2.4 million in tax revenues for Erie County over its 40-year lifespan. Take a look at this month’s project celebration with senatorlaughlin.
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commercialsolarguy · 6 years ago
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From @longi_solar LinkedIn - 1st bifacial #solar in NC, #developer @ccrsolar, part of @energy research program. Note interesting single axis trackers. https://www.instagram.com/p/BxHiiqEnXh1/
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commercialsolarguy · 6 years ago
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6MW #solarfarm, Chatham County, NC @CCRSolar, HBC Solar for civil work, fencing by Jason Truesdale. https://www.instagram.com/p/Bsj4LcxnjWa/
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commercialsolarguy · 6 years ago
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6MW #solarfarm, Chatham County, NC @CCRSolar, HBC Solar for civil work, fencing by Jason Truesdale. https://www.instagram.com/p/Bsj4GeNnXaX/
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commercialsolarguy · 6 years ago
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6MW #solarfarm, Chatham County, NC @CCRSolar, HBC Solar for civil work, fencing by Jason Truesdale. https://www.instagram.com/p/Bsj4BUsHiGF/
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commercialsolarguy · 7 years ago
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Cypress Creek Renewables will couple 12 solar projects with Lockheed GridStart lithium ion batteries for a North Carolina electricity cooperative.
Cypress Creek Renewables has commissioned 12 solar power systems coupled with 12 megawatt-hours (MWh) of batteries, as a project that will serve the 100,000 customers of the Brunswick Electric Membership Corporation in south-east North Carolina.
The energy storage hardware is being provided by Lockheed Martin in the form of their 100 kW/200 kWh to 500 kW/950 kWh GridStar Lithium Ion energy storage system (PDF).
The press image provided at the top of this article suggests two Lockheed GridStar units in the particular installation, and if the installations are similarly designed, that would mean 1 MWh total energy storage per installation. That suggests the units deployed might be the 250 kW/500 kWh GridStar variants (if they do in fact have that exact sizing).
A tweet showed a second project with two GridStar units:
You (hopefully) know that NC is home to a lot of solar. But did you know that we’re at the forefront of solar plus storage, too? @CCRSolar pic.twitter.com/klLvcRQKDj
— Maggie Clark (@mmc_UNC) March 27, 2018
A source told pv magazine that the sizing of these projects will increase their annual output by 5%. This excess electricity generation aligns with project comments that the electricity from the batteries and solar will be used to reduce peak electricity costs and create dispatchable solar resources.
Another major solar power developer is also pushing energy storage heavily into their solar power projects: NextEra and its subsidiary Florida Power and Light.
NextEra has quietly bid the largest energy storage project on the planet. The many hundreds of MWh of energy storage that were bid in conjunction with solar power increased the PPA offering from 2.95¢ per kilowatt-hour (kWh) to 3.6¢/kWh – an increase of only 0.65¢/kWh. This very low price is most likely possible because of the ability to earn additional revenue to that from the power contract during peak periods, by reselling clipped solar electricity at times of higher prices.
Earlier this year, Florida Power and Light announced that they had built a DC-coupled energy storage system specifically to capture clipped solar electricity from DC:AC oversized projects. This project has a 4 MW/12 MWh battery.
In addition to the 12MWh project, Florida Power and Light also has the current largest solar power plus energy storage project in the U.S. at 74.5 MW-AC plus 10 MW/40 MWh. The DC:AC ratio on this project is 1.65. The heavy DC:AC oversizing means a larger volume of clipping would occur in the high quality Central Florida sunlight – meaning a high probability that this storage system will be capturing that clipped electricity.
This 74.5 MW-AC project by Florida Power and Light is being built in connection with Babcock Ranches – a 100% solar power community in Central Florida. Comparing this project above to Cypress Creek Renewables distributing solar power and energy storage across a smaller electricity cooperative, one must wonder – at what size does a 12  MWh project turn into a cooperative wide ‘microgrid’? And then, at what size is it simply a ‘power grid’ and no longer ‘micro’?
This new solar+storage project comes on the heels of a very active period for Cypress Creek Renewables, which has built 1 GW of solar projects in the 18 months. And this is far from the end – the company has 5 GW of solar PV deployed or in the process of development.
via John Weaver – pv magazine USA
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